Allergic inflammation in the human lower respiratory tract affected by exposure to diesel exhaust.

Marc A Riedl, David Diaz-Sanchez, William S Linn, Henry Gong, Kenneth W Clark, Richard M Effros, J Wayne Miller, David R Cocker, Kiros T Berhane
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Abstract

To improve understanding of human health risks from exposure to diesel exhaust particles (DEP*), we tested whether immunologic effects previously observed in the human nose also occur in the lower airways. Our overall hypothesis was that cell influx and production of cytokines, chemokines, immunoglobulin E (IgE), and other mediators, which would be measurable in sputum and blood, occur in people with asthma after realistic controlled exposures to diesel exhaust (DE). In Phase 1 we tested for direct effects of DE in subjects with clinically undifferentiated mild asthma. In Phase 2 we tested whether DE exposure would exacerbate response to inhaled cat allergen in subjects with both asthma and cat sensitivity. The exposure facility was a controlled-environment chamber supplied with DE from an idling medium-duty truck with ultra-low-sulfur fuel and no catalytic converter. We exposed volunteers for 2 hours with intermittent exercise to exhaust with DEP mass concentration near 100 microg/m3. Exposures to nitrogen dioxide (NO2) near 0.35 ppm (similar to its concentration in DE) and to filtered air (FA) served as controls. Blood was drawn before exposure on day 1 and again the next morning (day 2). Sputum was induced only on day 2. Bronchial reactivity was measured -1 hour after exposure ended. Supplementary endpoints included measures of blood coagulation status, cardiopulmonary physiology, and symptoms. Each phase employed 15 subjects with asthma; 3 subjects participated in both phases. In Phase 1, airway reactivity was measured with inhaled methacholine; in Phase 2, with inhaled cat allergen. We found little biologic response to DE exposure compared with exposure to control atmospheres. In Phase 1, interleukin 4 (IL-4) in sputum showed an estimated 1.7-fold increase attributable to DE exposure, which was close to statistical significance; airway resistance increased modestly but significantly on day 2 after DE exposure; and nonspecific symptom scores increased significantly during DE exposure. In Phase 2, indicators of airway inflammation in sputum showed a possibly meaningful response: polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) and eosinophils increased after DE exposure, whereas macrophages decreased. IgE in sputum and the bronchoconstrictive response to cat allergen varied significantly between atmospheres, but not in patterns consistent with our primary hypothesis. Symptom score changes relatable to DE exposure were smaller than those in Phase 1 and not statistically significant. Controlled exposures, lasting 2 hours with intermittent exercise, to diluted DE at a particle mass concentration of 100 microg/m3 did not evoke clear and consistent lower-airway or systemic immunologic or inflammatory responses in mildly asthmatic subjects, with or without accompanying challenge with cat allergen. Likewise, these DE exposures did not significantly increase nonspecific or allergen-specific bronchial reactivity. A few isolated statistically significant or near-significant changes were observed during and after DE exposure, including increases in nonspecific symptoms (e.g., headache, nausea) suggestive of subtle, rapid-onset systemic effects. It is possible the lower respiratory tract is more resistant than the nose to adjuvant effects of diesel particles on allergic inflammation, so that no meaningful effects occur under exposure conditions like these. Alternatively, the experimental conditions may have been near a threshold for finding effects. That is, important lower respiratory effects may occur but may be detectable experimentally with slightly higher DEP concentrations, longer exposures, more invasive testing (e.g., bronchoalveolar lavage), or more susceptible subjects. However, ethical and practical barriers to such experiments are considerable.

暴露于柴油废气影响的人类下呼吸道过敏性炎症。
为了提高对暴露于柴油废气颗粒(DEP*)对人类健康风险的认识,我们测试了先前在人类鼻子中观察到的免疫效应是否也会在下呼吸道中发生。我们的总体假设是,哮喘患者在实际控制柴油机废气(DE)暴露后,痰和血液中可测量的细胞内流和细胞因子、趋化因子、免疫球蛋白E (IgE)和其他介质的产生。在第一阶段,我们测试了DE对临床未分化轻度哮喘患者的直接影响。在第二阶段,我们测试了暴露于DE是否会加重哮喘和猫敏感性受试者对吸入猫过敏原的反应。暴露设施是一个受控的环境室,由一辆空转的中型卡车提供废气,使用超低硫燃料,没有催化转化器。我们让志愿者间歇性运动2小时,使其废气中DEP的质量浓度接近100微克/立方米。暴露于接近0.35 ppm的二氧化氮(NO2)(与其在DE中的浓度相似)和过滤空气(FA)中作为对照。第1天暴露前抽血,第二天早上(第2天)再次抽血。仅在第2天诱导痰。暴露结束后-1小时测量支气管反应性。补充终点包括凝血状态、心肺生理和症状的测量。每个阶段采用15名哮喘患者;两个阶段均有3名受试者参与。在第一阶段,吸入甲胆碱测量气道反应性;第二阶段,吸入猫过敏原。我们发现,与暴露于对照环境相比,暴露于DE的生物反应很小。在第一阶段,痰中白细胞介素4 (IL-4)估计因暴露于DE而增加1.7倍,接近统计学意义;暴露后第2天气道阻力略有增加,但显著增加;非特异性症状评分在DE暴露期间显著增加。在第2期,痰中气道炎症指标显示可能有意义的反应:DE暴露后多形核白细胞(PMNs)和嗜酸性粒细胞增加,而巨噬细胞减少。痰中的IgE和对猫过敏原的支气管收缩反应在不同的环境中有显著差异,但与我们的主要假设不一致。与DE暴露相关的症状评分变化小于1期,无统计学意义。在轻度哮喘患者中,无论是否伴有猫过敏原的刺激,持续2小时的间歇性运动控制暴露于颗粒质量浓度为100微克/立方米的稀释DE中,都不会引起明确和一致的下气道或全身免疫或炎症反应。同样,这些DE暴露并没有显著增加非特异性或过敏原特异性支气管反应性。在DE暴露期间和之后观察到一些孤立的统计上显著或接近显著的变化,包括非特异性症状(如头痛、恶心)的增加,提示微妙的、快速发作的全身效应。下呼吸道可能比鼻子更能抵抗柴油颗粒对过敏性炎症的辅助作用,因此在这样的暴露条件下不会产生有意义的影响。或者,实验条件可能已经接近发现效应的阈值。也就是说,可能会发生重要的下呼吸道影响,但可能在实验中通过稍高的DEP浓度、较长的暴露时间、更具侵入性的检测(如支气管肺泡灌洗)或更敏感的受试者中检测到。然而,这种实验的伦理和实践障碍是相当大的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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